Showing posts with label culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label culture. Show all posts

Saturday, April 5, 2008

What we can learn from Denmark

Goodbye blond girls, drunk Danes, Tuborg beer, dark skies and on-time Metro trains. Welcome back bargaining, insane traffic, millions of small traders, religious fervor and magical spicy food. Welcome back chaos.

As I travel outside India, I often hear people taking pride in eastern spiritualism and deriding western materialism. The notion of material comforts versus peace of mind. Yes, life is simple in India. Yes, we do things you would term culturally rich. But we also commit shocking acts in the name of religion. And I have met remarkably materialistic Indians, just as I have met remarkably generous Danes. I’m slowly starting to reject the spiritually elevated nature of East versus the hollow materialist West as just another stereotype. All young people I’ve met across the continents are the same. All guys, well most of them, talk about getting laid and which girls they want to hit on. CBS exchange student residence dinners had girls casually categorizing bars where guys grope genitals softly. We Indians do the same. You talk, we whisper. Same subjects. I think there’s much more to learn from each other than we all care to believe.


Indians are so very good at laughing off misery. We experience 1-2 hour electricity power cuts in a day about as often as Danes party in a week. Go 50 miles from New Delhi and it gets worse. But we make good use of it. In the darkness we talk. We go for a walk. We joke about it. I still remember Henrik’s expression when the water tap went dry for 20 minutes one day in four months and how he riled about his 60 percent income tax return to Mr. Rasmussen’s kitty. You Danes are rich, spoilt and demanding. You could learn some patience from us.


Indians are so very emotional. We are the Bollywood breed. We are better lovers than the Italians. We fantasize too much. We also compromise too much. I think India’s sub five percent divorce rates are as misleading as Denmark’s 60-something percent divorce rates. Those five percent hides quite a number of unhappy households, female social divorce stigma and male dominance. You Danes are much better at handling relationships. You move on. We often drag relationships. But family gives us the greatest pleasure. We never travel alone. We never eat alone. We never shop alone. We’re always a bunch. We are never alone. We are so very socially potent. Moms, dads, brothers, sisters, uncles, aunts, nephews and nieces are our life. You could learn some family relationship management from us.


Indians are entertaining drinkers. We simply don’t know how to. Decades of strict government control on alcohol has catapulted drunkards into collective social despisement. If you are walking funny in the middle of the night in India, expect no sympathy. If you fall, you’re going to stay there until you wake up next morning. Danes drink to celebrate – so very often without reason. I was amazed by the remarkable tolerance you have for drunks. Indians start out drinking to celebrate, but end up melodramatically imparting great worldly wisdom to everyone around. For teetotalers, it’s a hilarious sight. We need to learn drinking from you. We all need to join the two-month-Danish-beer-boot-camps.


Indians need to give more space for women in politics, public service and on the dance floor. There are too many men out. Ludicrous it may sound, considering that India’s crime rate against women is several notches higher than Denmark’s, we are brought up where the society’s civility quotient is directly proportional to the moral conduct of women. It’s so much freer to be a man here. The thought of randomly grabbing a girl’s rear in the middle of drunken fest in the Barcelona Bar in Copenhagen comes with a moral liability. It should. But a woman’s willingness under disco lights shouldn’t decide the moral meter of our society. We need to learn from you. Indian men should do dishes more often.


Indians take education too seriously – maybe because of our population of one billion people or having so much free talent at our disposal. But we take it all too seriously. We worry about exams more than the content of the education itself. It should be more like CBS. Learning should be fun. We need to have cooler professors. We need to have fashion shows late in the day followed by free beer. Okay, free flavored milk and juices. We need to party like you on Friday and Saturday nights.

I was dating Denmark for four months. I followed her every move, at every hour. How they got your paperwork done at the local Kommune. How the professors took time to meet you. How the neXus staff welcomed you. How the librarian went down the basement to search for the book for you. How the neighbors on the upper floor talked to you the day after your late night partying. How the bus driver took time to understand where you needed to go. She was delightful.


Whenever I think of Denmark in the future, I will think of Solbjerg Plads, drunk young people, old people in buses, kissing couples, sleeping babies on the back of bicycles and a lovely Danish Christmas with Henrik’s family. I will always cherish my Danish memories.

Five stars to CBS’ exchange program. Thanks for the beer too.


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First column for Danish newspaper 'The CBS Cornet'

Dear Dad,

I hope everything is great at home and that mom is enjoying her post-retirement life. How’s my little angel Unchi growing up?

Ah, I did finally reach Denmark and currently staying with my Danish room mate Henrik. Statistically, they say it’s the home of the eighth highest per capita beer consumption on our planet. Watching Henrik and his friends indulge in their half hourly beer guzzling conventions, no wonder Danish beer recycling has been in existence since the days of Ford Model T. Henrik once suggested, in all seriousness, only if the government could supply beer directly through the existing water pipes in homes. I just stood listening. Beer is just everywhere.

Oh, nudity! It’s just everywhere. Young Danes discuss sex, its processes, applications and events so casually like we do about the choice of snacks at 5pm in India. And unlike us, these discussions are democratically inclusive of both the sexes together. Nude women are plastered all over Copenhagen: on buses, gymnasium ads, clothing retailers, posters under flyovers, night clubs and sex shops. I also ‘discovered’ The Museum of Erotica in one of the famous shopping streets, which ironically stands nonchalantly than a silly condom vending machine does in New Delhi. And if you visit Copenhagen, don't get misled by associating the omnipresent spray painted '69' with anything even close to mating. From outright stunning to stunningly outrageous and in all possible inappropriate places, graffiti is just everywhere.

Dad, analogically speaking, moving from Texas to Copenhagen was like Danish football team losing to Faroe Islands 0-4 in a home game.

I finally could relate myself to comparable physical human dimensions after cohabiting with XXL Texans. Shopping became easy to find right fit clothes at first try, talking became easy without your neck pointing up all the time and introduction became easy (for George Bush everybody knew Texas). Bananas finally look like bananas and so does squirrels. Gone are those Shrek size cauliflowers and mushrooms enough to last a week. If ‘everything’s big in Texas’, then everything’s small-medium in Denmark.

Texans don’t walk or cycle, they either jog or drive. Only the unlucky iota travels in buses or trains as there aren’t many. The thought of driving a Volkswagen on Frederiksberg’s 4-lane road would bruise the Texan ego. It’s the home of Ford trucks, $3/gallon petrol and monster highways. And the local delightful sight of a helmet-strapped one-year old on the rear of a bicycle with his mom is only quixotically possible in the Bush land.

Women are beautiful across each side of the Atlantic with the only palpable difference in the quantity of clothes. Sartorially speaking, it’s sleeveless cotton tops, denim shorts and high heels versus hooded overcoats and high boots. While the Texan idea of fashion was big, rough and robust, the Danish version is sleek, chic and minimalist. The Texas classroom had young Texan guys in bland long shorts, T-shirts and baseball caps, Danes come in their low body hugging trousers with colorful mufflers and shoes. Anyways, who would dare don shorts in this gothic Danish weather?

Okay dad, you’ve got to visit Denmark sometime, taste the freshest McDonalds’ burgers on earth and meet Henrik. And I pray to God to shower some more sun to this country; they crave for it like Indians crave for foreign trips and Americans do for free healthcare insurance.

Love to mom, Montu, Pampy and Unchi.
Good night.
Rahul

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